matutinal

Etymology
Borrowed from (modern 🇨🇬), and from its , from  (from  (from ) +  +.

Sense 2 (“active in the morning; waking up early”) is possibly modelled after 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * Of, occurring in, or relating to the morning, especially the early morning upon waking up.
 * 1) * 1874, Henry James, "Professor Fargo" in The Galaxy 18(2) (August 1874): 233–253.
 * [A] young lady was introduced who had come to request him to raise a ghost—a resolute young lady, with several ringlets and a huge ancestral umbrella, whose matutinal appetite for the supernatural had not been quenched by the raw autumnal storm.
 * 1) Active in the morning; waking up early.
 * [A] young lady was introduced who had come to request him to raise a ghost—a resolute young lady, with several ringlets and a huge ancestral umbrella, whose matutinal appetite for the supernatural had not been quenched by the raw autumnal storm.
 * 1) Active in the morning; waking up early.
 * 1) Active in the morning; waking up early.

Translations

 * Bulgarian: утринен
 * Esperanto: matena
 * French:
 * German:
 * Irish: maidiniúil, maidine
 * Romanian:
 * Russian:
 * Spanish:, ,

Etymology
From, from its , from  (from  (from ) +  +.